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#31
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Electronic Shifting Replay
AMuzi writes:
On 7/20/2019 1:43 PM, Steve Weeks wrote: On Friday, July 19, 2019 at 9:04:50 PM UTC-5, John B. wrote: Hey! Just the guy I need :-) Why a 3 months wait? Hard to say. If there were radiographic changes around the end of the root(s), the dentist might be waiting for them to resolve before buttoning everything up. I don't usually do this because the temporarily restored tooth is vulnerable to harm (fracture, loss of temporary seal, etc.). I'll generally complete most root canals in a single sitting unless they are symptomatic or heavily infected. Otherwise, usually no more than 2 visits a week or two apart. Check out the new technology my department just acquired: https://sonendo.com/ I'm still learning how to use it, but it seems promising. Beaucoup bucks to buy, though! Sorry... didn't mean to hijack the thread! Don't apologize- a root canal is more interesting and less painful than many topics on RBT. +1 |
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#32
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 7:49:24 PM UTC+1, AMuzi wrote:
On 7/20/2019 1:43 PM, Steve Weeks wrote: On Friday, July 19, 2019 at 9:04:50 PM UTC-5, John B. wrote: Hey! Just the guy I need :-) Why a 3 months wait? Hard to say. If there were radiographic changes around the end of the root(s), the dentist might be waiting for them to resolve before buttoning everything up. I don't usually do this because the temporarily restored tooth is vulnerable to harm (fracture, loss of temporary seal, etc.). I'll generally complete most root canals in a single sitting unless they are symptomatic or heavily infected. Otherwise, usually no more than 2 visits a week or two apart. Check out the new technology my department just acquired: https://sonendo.com/ I'm still learning how to use it, but it seems promising. Beaucoup bucks to buy, though! Sorry... didn't mean to hijack the thread! Don't apologize- a root canal is more interesting and less painful than many topics on RBT. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 You're wicked, Andrew Muzi. Your reward will be in a hot place. Andre Jute I've had root canal. I would certainly wish it on my enemies, if I had any/ |
#33
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Sat, 20 Jul 2019 18:15:13 +0000 (UTC), Theodore Heise
wrote: On Sat, 20 Jul 2019 09:04:45 +0700, John B wrote: On Fri, 19 Jul 2019 17:48:34 -0700 (PDT), Steve Weeks wrote: On Friday, July 19, 2019 at 12:07:00 PM UTC-5, Andre Jute wrote: That's a super Neddy article. Neddy is an all-purpose technical innocent who requires explicit step by step instructions... I love articles like that because they save me the bother -- and the expense when I get it wrong -- of working the steps out myself. I was that "Neddy"... it was a real discovery process for me. My "real" job is teaching dental students to perform root canal treatment, and such documentation and teaching skills as I have transferred to bike mechanics reasonably well. :-) Steve Hey! Just the guy I need :-) My wife just finished a visit to the dentist where, listening to her explanation, the dentist apparently reamed the root out of the tooth and installed some sort of temporary filling and told her to come back in 3 months for the permanent fix. Please note that my wife is a Thai and while she speaks English well she has little "technical language" so her explanation may be faulty, but when I still had teeth I had two root canals done and in both cases it was all done in one sitting... as I remember. Why a 3 months wait? Well, you might ask about the "reamed out the root" part. Is it possible he actually extracted the tooth (including the root)? If an implant is planned, there is typically a several month wait after an extraction for the bone to heal and fill in before the post is installed. That would be followed by a crown that is mounted on the post (after it is healed in too). If it really was a root canal, maybe the other responder who suggested need for an infection to resolve has it right--though I don't recall ever needing to have the canals filled twice in the several root canals I've had. Well, the guy I was responding to had written that "My "real" job is teaching dental students to perform root canal treatment" and as my wife's dentist stated that it was a "root canal" I can only assume that both parties did know what they were talking about. -- cheers, John B. |
#34
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 5:10:15 PM UTC-5, Andre Jute wrote:
I've had root canal. I would certainly wish it on my enemies, if I had any/ Heh...I do about 30% of my cases without anesthesia, conditions permitting, and no one is suffering. Occasionally I see a case where comfort control is difficult, but these are rare. |
#35
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 5:55:12 PM UTC-5, John B. wrote:
Well, the guy I was responding to had written that "My "real" job is teaching dental students to perform root canal treatment" and as my wife's dentist stated that it was a "root canal" I can only assume that both parties did know what they were talking about. That would be me. :-) I am an "endodontist"... 2 years of training after dental school, and my practice is "limited to endodontics". Steve |
#36
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 10:28:24 PM UTC-4, Steve Weeks wrote:
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 5:10:15 PM UTC-5, Andre Jute wrote: I've had root canal. I would certainly wish it on my enemies, if I had any/ Heh...I do about 30% of my cases without anesthesia, conditions permitting, and no one is suffering. Occasionally I see a case where comfort control is difficult, but these are rare. I've had many root canals done on me and I've never had any problems either during or after. I often wonder what's the big thing about getting a root canal done that makes people think it's such a terribly painful thing to have done. Or have I just been lucky to have good dentists perform them? Cheers |
#37
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 10:39:52 PM UTC-4, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
I've had many root canals done on me and I've never had any problems either during or after. I often wonder what's the big thing about getting a root canal done that makes people think it's such a terribly painful thing to have done. Or have I just been lucky to have good dentists perform them? A very good friend of mine just had a failed root canal. After working on her for 90 minutes, the dental guy said the tooth has four roots, but he couldn't find two of them. It wasn't that she was in pain during the procedure; it's just a really long time to be sitting in a chair with your mouth wide open, while someone is digging around in your tooth. She's very disappointed that she's got to go back so he can try again. - Frank Krygowski |
#38
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Sat, 20 Jul 2019 19:28:22 -0700 (PDT), Steve Weeks
wrote: On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 5:10:15 PM UTC-5, Andre Jute wrote: I've had root canal. I would certainly wish it on my enemies, if I had any/ Heh...I do about 30% of my cases without anesthesia, conditions permitting, and no one is suffering. Occasionally I see a case where comfort control is difficult, but these are rare. I had two root canal's some years apart and I don't remember any pain. It is very likely that there was some but certainly not sufficient agony that I remember it as having been a dreadful thing. In fact when my wife came back from the dentist and said something along the lines of , "wow! it sure hurt a lot", I was surprised. -- cheers, John B. |
#39
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Sunday, July 21, 2019 at 3:28:24 AM UTC+1, Steve Weeks wrote:
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 5:10:15 PM UTC-5, Andre Jute wrote: I've had root canal. I would certainly wish it on my enemies, if I had any/ Heh...I do about 30% of my cases without anesthesia, conditions permitting, and no one is suffering. Occasionally I see a case where comfort control is difficult, but these are rare. A useful word in Afrikaans (like many German portmanteau words) has no direct English equivalent: "kleinserig". On the face of it, it translates, widely off target, as "little hurts", where "little" is a noun, not an adjective. In fact the "little" *is* an adjective and the true meaning is "someone who reacts to pinpricks" or perhaps more literally "someone who reacts to small hurts". I always take the full anaesthetic available and put down right smartly those who scoff "don't be such a big baby" or equivalents. I see absolutely no virtue in stoicism. But root canal treatment, if by it is meant merely the process of rasping out the dead nerve and infection inside the root of the tooth, isn't actually the most painful dental procedure. Last year or the year before I had to have a tooth out, and by the time my dentist, my GP and my cardiologist's team had all exchanged several rounds of letters about whether it was better to suffer an infected tooth or to bleed to death from a long history of taking aspirin daily, which the cardiologists absolutely refused to let me stop for even a day, I was in serious pain, and putting a needle (to suck out the puss) down beside the root of even a long dead tooth with a post and a crown was awful even with anaesthetic. It was the grinding, grating, tearing feeling in my head that persuaded me that it hurt, of course, because there was no actual pain. I can imagine that, without anaesthetic, the hardiest patient would complain at this procedure. Andre Jute Linguist |
#40
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Electronic Shifting Replay
On Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 11:43:27 AM UTC-7, Steve Weeks wrote:
On Friday, July 19, 2019 at 9:04:50 PM UTC-5, John B. wrote: Hey! Just the guy I need :-) Why a 3 months wait? Hard to say. If there were radiographic changes around the end of the root(s), the dentist might be waiting for them to resolve before buttoning everything up. I don't usually do this because the temporarily restored tooth is vulnerable to harm (fracture, loss of temporary seal, etc.). I'll generally complete most root canals in a single sitting unless they are symptomatic or heavily infected. Otherwise, usually no more than 2 visits a week or two apart. Check out the new technology my department just acquired: https://sonendo..com/ I'm still learning how to use it, but it seems promising. Beaucoup bucks to buy, though! Sorry... didn't mean to hijack the thread! I seem to be one of those people who have an extra nerve in each tooth that used to be missed occasionally until I would tell the dentist. Or rather, remind them. |
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